Evelyn Hernandez, 21, smiles in court after being acquitted on charges of aggravated homicide in her retrial. Photo / AP
A young rape victim who was suspected of having an abortion and charged with homicide was acquitted by a judge at a retrial Monday in a case that attracted international attention to El Salvador's strict abortion laws.
Evelyn Beatriz Hernández, now 21, had served 33 months of a 30-year prison sentence when her conviction was overturned in February for lack of evidence and a new trial was ordered. Prosecutors had asked for a 40-year sentence.
The retrial was a first for such a case in the Central American nation, where prosecutors aggressively pursue legal cases against women who have miscarriages or other obstetric emergencies, accusing them of murder.
"Thank God, justice was done," Hernández said following the announcement of the verdict, visibly emotional as dozens of women waited at the courthouse.
Hernández also thanked foreign diplomats who have followed the case closely.
Hernández's foetus was at 32 weeks in 2016 when she felt intense abdominal pains and delivered it into an outdoor toilet, and it was later found lifeless in a septic tank.
Her mother said she found her passed out next to the latrine, and Hernández said she didn't know she was pregnant.
Both women said they didn't know there was a foetus in the tank, but prosecutors didn't believe them and pressed charges.
Forensic experts were unable to determine whether it died in the uterus or in the septic tank.
At the retrial, prosecutors' argument against Hernández was commission by omission — that is, she failed to protect her foetus.
"We believe the judge has been very fair in his ruling," defence lawyer Bertha María Deleón said.
"He has said that there was no way to prove a crime and for that reason he absolved her."
El Salvador is one of three Central American nations with total bans on abortion.
Women convicted of having abortions face sentences of two to eight years.
But women who turn up at public hospitals following a miscarriage are sometimes accused of having killed the foetus and charged with aggravated homicide, which carries a sentence of 30 to 40 years.
Such punishments often fall on poor, young women and victims of rape.
"This is a resounding victory for the rights of women in El Salvador. It reaffirms that no woman should be wrongly accused of homicide for the simple fact of suffering an obstetric emergency," said Erika Guevara-Rosas, Americas director at Amnesty International.
Guevara-Rosas called on El Salvador to cease "criminalising women once and for all by immediately revoking the nation's draconian anti-abortion laws."
El Salvador is a deeply religious country with 80 per cent of the population identifying as Catholic or evangelical Christian.
It's also home to macho attitudes on women's role in society, as well as widespread gang violence.
"We judge cases based on religious convictions, often for things that should never enter in a courtroom," defence lawyer Arnau Baulenas said.
"We have to stop using justice to respond to social needs," Baulenas added.
"Justice should do its work with criminals, not innocent people."
Every year an estimated 25,000 women are impregnated after rapes in the country of just over 6 million.
It is believed that thousands of clandestine abortions are carried out each year in El Salvador.
Recent polls have shown broad support for more lenient abortion laws, though many in the country believe rape victims should be made to carry pregnancies to term.
Hernández's case was seen as a test for women's reproductive rights under new President Nayib Bukele, who has said he believes abortion is acceptable only when the mother's life is at risk but that he opposes criminalising women who have miscarriages.
"If a poor woman has a miscarriage, she's immediately suspected of having had an abortion," Bukele said in 2018.